Morphological and population genomic evidence that human faces have evolved to signal individual identity
Facial recognition plays a key role in human interactions, and there has been great interest in understanding the evolution of human abilities for individual recognition and tracking social relationships. Individual recognition requires sufficient cognitive abilities and phenotypic diversity within...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2014-09, Vol.5 (1), p.4800-4800, Article 4800 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Facial recognition plays a key role in human interactions, and there has been great interest in understanding the evolution of human abilities for individual recognition and tracking social relationships. Individual recognition requires sufficient cognitive abilities and phenotypic diversity within a population for discrimination to be possible. Despite the importance of facial recognition in humans, the evolution of facial identity has received little attention. Here we demonstrate that faces evolved to signal individual identity under negative frequency-dependent selection. Faces show elevated phenotypic variation and lower between-trait correlations compared with other traits. Regions surrounding face-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms show elevated diversity consistent with frequency-dependent selection. Genetic variation maintained by identity signalling tends to be shared across populations and, for some loci, predates the origin of
Homo sapiens
. Studies of human social evolution tend to emphasize cognitive adaptations, but we show that social evolution has shaped patterns of human phenotypic and genetic diversity as well.
The evolution of facial identity is poorly understood. Here, the authors show that human faces have elevated phenotypic variation as well as low between-trait correlations and that the regions surrounding face-associated genes show elevated diversity, which is consistent with frequency-dependent selection. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ncomms5800 |